Good morning Todd. Just finished this one up. In my mind I thought I had been to this state park but I can’t find a video that I did from it so maybe not. Very interesting family connection. It has more lake amenities than most of the other state parksgreat location as well. Healthy foods to feed ducks include: cracked corn, oats, rice, frozen peas, chopped lettuce, sliced grapes, birdseed, sweetcorn, broccoli, and most fruits (excluding citrus); essentially, opt for foods that are similar to what ducks would naturally forage for in the wild, avoiding bread, crackers, and other processed junk food which lack nutritional value and can harm their health. 25:50
Hey, Todd. On behalf of posterity, thank you. Interesting family history. And the campground looks like a good place. The campsites seem to have a fair amount of elbow room to them, which makes for a more pleasant experience. Some places are more like a parking lot, where you sit at your picnic table looking at your neighbor's sewer hookup. You never know what you'll find in those little marina & campground stores. I got a small battery powered lantern at the camp store in a Wisconsin state park, lasted me a long time. Very useful when electric went out in a thunderstorm.
Good morning Todd. Just finished this one up. In my mind I thought I had been to this state park but I can’t find a video that I did from it so maybe not. Very interesting family connection. It has more lake amenities than most of the other state parksgreat location as well.
Healthy foods to feed ducks include: cracked corn, oats, rice, frozen peas, chopped lettuce, sliced grapes, birdseed, sweetcorn, broccoli, and most fruits (excluding citrus); essentially, opt for foods that are similar to what ducks would naturally forage for in the wild, avoiding bread, crackers, and other processed junk food which lack nutritional value and can harm their health. 25:50
Hey, Todd. On behalf of posterity, thank you. Interesting family history. And the campground looks like a good place. The campsites seem to have a fair amount of elbow room to them, which makes for a more pleasant experience. Some places are more like a parking lot, where you sit at your picnic table looking at your neighbor's sewer hookup.
You never know what you'll find in those little marina & campground stores. I got a small battery powered lantern at the camp store in a Wisconsin state park, lasted me a long time. Very useful when electric went out in a thunderstorm.
Thanks for a great tour of the park Todd. Wow $20 is high for a day pass. Sounds like a great place for a 20 year old to work and live back then.👍✌️
Interesting history. Looks like a nice place
Yes Kevin, it's a really nice RV Park and Marina.
Cool. Idea Todd! I’m there a lot and haven’t seen all of it!